Now, however, he headlines in a smart little flick which is earning
rave reviews in America.

The film is The Cooler and, having sparked a bidding frenzy at
the Sundance Film Festival, it has now set the tongues of US critics
wagging in its favour - not least because of the performance of
Macy.

The actor plays Bernie Lootz, a man with chronic bad luck that
quickly spreads to those around him.

His ability to give bad luck to others lands him a job at a casino,
where he spoils the winning streaks of gamblers.

But when he meets and falls in love with a waitress, Natalie
(Maria Bello), his luck turns good and all hell breaks loose.

The film co-stars Alec Baldwin and Estella Warren and is directed
by Wayne Kramer.

According to website, Movies.com, the film's distributor, Lions
Gate, paid $1.5 million to turn The Cooler into the first pickup
of the 2003 Sundance Film Festival, prompting media interest to
go through the roof.

But while a second screening failed to generate as much interest
as at first hoped for, the main talking point, prior to the US
release, was the fact that the 52-year-old Macy gets repeatedly
naked.

Macy and Bello are both said to be excellent, but there is a
great deal of buzz, also, surrounding Baldwin, who, pending a
successful release, could be the most likely to secure an Oscar
nomination.

US reaction

Critics in America were largely raving about this smart little
movie, with Macy and Baldwin, in particular, being singled out
for praise...

Leading the way is Rolling Stone, which wrote that 'from
James Whitaker's seductive camerawork to Mark Isham's lush score,
The Cooler places all the smart bets and hits the jackpot'.

The New York Times noted that 'this picture is rescued
from cliche by the quality of the acting, and Mr. Kramer wisely
gives the actors room to work'.

And the New York Post stated that it is 'the best thing
Baldwin has done in years, and a triumph of low-budget storytelling
by a director to watch'.

The Hollywood Reporter wrote that 'it's got the kick,
style and flavor of a straight-up story, before movies were watered
down with the opinions of marketers, lawyers and committee heads'.

While LA Weekly found that 'the romance that ensues between
Macy and Bello (both of whom are terrific) is exactly the kind
of mature, sexy adult relationship that people complain doesn't
exist in movies anymore'.

Continuing the accolades was E! Online, which wrote that
'Baldwin's bad-dude turn is devilishly good, and Macy gives a
great sad-sack performance'.

And Film Threat noted that it 'does wonderful things with
an unlikely, maybe even slightly fantastic love story between
two star-crossed lovers'.

And concluding this overview, is Film Journal International,
which opined that, 'in the end, The Cooler succeeds not because
of its script (clever enough) or its direction (surprisingly skillful),
but because of its cast'.